I've set out a new vegetable garden this year. Not huge, but resulting in about 15 sqm of growing space. Eagerness to get it up and running before the season started meant I came up with a plan and got it into the ground Feb/Mar.
I've since worked out that in the same area, by reorienting the beds east/west (currently north/south) I can get 27sqm of growing space - circa 100% more. Worse still, what I have done now means a summer of difficult mowing. Grass is the current path medium in the majority and the set-up means I've made the paths too narrow to access with anything other than a strimmer. I've since been able to access a volume of woodchips that with an east/west orientation gives me scope to have paths between beds of woodchips instead.
I now have to make a choice; tear down my veg garden as it is, reorient it correctly and only make second plantings in June/July - a lot of work, but sets it up 'correctly'.
Alternatively, I can leave it as is until the winter, then reorient then. However, that equally means masses of work, mowing in difficult areas throughout the season. It also means less of the garden is in full sun, so the yield will likely be lesser. I could mow and throw down woodchips in the paths now, but it will a) be very messy and b) still need changing later. For reasons of space doing it this way also makes the change later, harder.
Has anyone done this? Just bite the bullet or wait to - neither is ideal and both mean work plus a yield.
PS: For anyone reading who is still in the planning stage this represents a prime example of why we
should wait to take action, but also why one must be adaptable - accept feedback. It's only now that this garden is off the paper and on the ground that I can read how difficult it will be to manage. I planned its implementation carefully and this is our 3rd year on the property. I haven't rushed to this and thought the current layout was right. It isn't.